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tv   CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley  CBS  January 9, 2013 5:30pm-6:00pm PST

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>> pelley: good evening. this national flu epidemic is getting worse by the day, and, today, boston-- population 600,000-plus-- declared a public health emergency after the virus killed more than a dozen people. at least three more states-- montana, south dakota and arizona-- are now reporting widespread flu, bringing the total to 44 states. and the c.d.c. said the percentage of people going to the hospital for treatment has doubled in the past month. we asked dr. jon lapook to give us the latest. >> reporter: the emergency in boston was declared after confirmed cases of flu reached 700. there were just 70 at this time last year. across the state, 18 patients have died. dr. barbara ferrer is the executive director of the boston public health commission. >> in the last two weeks alone we've doubled our number. so if we continue at this rate to see new cases, we'll have an explosion of flu in the city of
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boston. so we really need to get ahead of this at this point in time. >> reporter: and to do that, officials are urging vaccination for everyone six months and older. clinics will be giving free shots this weekend. lehigh valley hospital in pennsylvania is getting as many as 100 patients a day with flu- like symptoms. a tent has been set up to handle the less serious cases. nurse terry burger is in charge of infection control. >> we need a full functioning, active emergency department for the community, and this just enables us to see the patients that are not as sick. so mild illness, mild injuries see them quickly and then discharge them. >> reporter: 60 miles south in chadds ford, the entire coan family got the vaccine, but eight-year-old alex came down with the flu anyway. >> you cough a lot, kind of sneeze a little. you want to lay in bed all day. >> as a mom, i was very disappointed that he got the flu because i had to fight him tooth and nail to get the flu shot.
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>> reporter: in recent years the vaccine has been about 60% to 70% effective at preventing the flu. recently, scientists discovered this year's vaccine is not protecting against specific strains. dr. william schaffner is on the panel that decides what goes in the vaccine. >> there's an influenza-b strain that's out there, an additional strain causing about 10% of the mischief, and that's not in the vaccine. and that accounts for some of the influenza that's out there. >> reporter: the c.d.c. tells me this year's vaccine is still very well matched to the strains that are out there. and, scott, even when the vaccine does not prevent the flu, it can still stop complications including pneumonia and death. >> pelley: so get the vaccine. jon, this is clearly a worst season than last year. but how does it compare, historically? >> reporter: a lot of people don't realize the flu varies in intensity from year to year. some years, it's mild, it could be moderate or severe. the c.d.c. told me today this is a moderate to severe season but well within what's historically a normal range of normal. >> pelley: thanks very much,
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doctor. we saw evidence today that james holmes spent weeks planning his attack on that movie theater in aurora, colorado, last july. 12 people were killed and 70 injured. in a hearing this week prosecutors have been trying to show that there is enough evidence to try holmes for murder. manuel bojorquez was in the courtroom. >> reporter: prosecutors presented cell phone photos james holmes took of himself hours before the movie theater attack. one photograph showed him holding a pistol, his hair dyed orange, a grin on his face. another showed him sticking his tongue out. holmes smiled when it was displayed for the court. it was his first visible reaction to any evidence presented over three days of testimony. shooting victim yousef gharbi was in the courtroom. >> he looked like he was having a great time taking those pictures. i mean, he must have been pretty excited about going to do the shooting. >> reporter: prosecutors also
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showed photos of the theater they said holmes took about a month before the shooting. they included the door police say holmes propped open so he could reenter after getting weapons from his car. holmes' defense team decided not to call any witnesses. attorney daniel king told the judge, "this is neither the proper venue nor the time to put on a show." it's expected holmes' lawyers will present an insanity defense. this man's son was killed in the shooting. >> we want to call him crazy because we want to make that feel better in our society. but we have to accept the fact that there's evil people in our society that enjoy killing any type of living thing. but that doesn't make them crazy. >> reporter: james holmes will be back in court on friday and scott, the judge could allow cameras into the courtroom. >> pelley: manuel, thank you. that tragedy in aurora, followed by the shooting deaths of 20 first graders and six educators in newtown, connecticut, led the president to promise action.
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well, tonight, major garrett at the white house has learned some of what the president intends to do. major? >> reporter: scott, senior administration officials tell us the president is likely to unveil his new ideas to reduce gun violence next week. the president will push his gun control agenda in his state of the union address next month. in the meantime, we're learning some specifics about what that program is. the president wants congress to reinstate the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004, and extend criminal and mental health background checks to firearms sales at gun shows and through private dealers. vice president biden has devoted this week to hearing from all sides, including the n.r.a. tomorrow. >> we're here today to deal with a problem that requires immediate action, urgent action, and the president and i are determined to take action. >> reporter: he met today with victims of gun violence and gun control advocates and said the political climate will never be the same after the newtown massacre. >> i've been doing this a long
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time. of all the tragic events we've endured, i don't think anything has touched the heart of the american people so profoundly as seeing those young children not only being shot but riddled with bullets. >> reporter: the white house is also looking at ways to encourage gun owners to use and store their firearms more safely. it is reviewing the effectiveness of gun buyback programs, seeing if a federal buyback program might actually work. biden also said the president might side-step congress and seek to advance his agenda through executive order. senior officials offered no details, but, scott, they acknowledge there's very little the president can do to advance gun control without the consent of congress. >> pelley: major, you mentioned that the vice president is going to meet with the national rifle association tomorrow. what's that conversation going to be about? >> reporter: well, it might start with awkward silence. both sides said they're going to come to listen to each other.
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but i've talked to senior administration officials who said they could not advance this agenda if they didn't invite sportsmen and the n.r.a. here. n.r.a. representatives told me they had to come because if they denied this meeting, they would be outside and have no voice whatsoever. neither side, though, expects a great sense of meeting of the mind. >> pelley: major, thank you. the governor of new york today proposed new state laws to ban assault weapons and high- capacity ammunition clips. this was governor andrew cuomo earlier. >> i own a gun. i own a remington shotgun. i've hunted, i've shot. that's not what this is about. it is about ending the unnecessary risk of high capacity assault rifles! ( applause ) that's what this is about! >> pelley: in neighboring connecticut, where the latest tragedy occurred, the legislature there is debating gun restrictions of its own. michelle miller is covering that for us. >> reporter: state senator beth bye represents a part of
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connecticut that's home to colt, the gun maker that's been in business since 1836. but the democrat decided to push for new state gun laws after going to the funeral of one of newtown's six-year-old victims. you were at anna marquez-green's funeral, and her mother, your friend, gave you a message. what did she say? >> her message to me was, "we need to get something done." >> reporter: bye's proposals limit access to assault weapons, high-capacity ammunition clips and levees a 50% sales tax on ammunition. but parts of her bills have already been met by opposition that includes resistance from state senator john mckinney. >> i think if you tax ammunition so high that some people can't afford to buy ammunition, then you've taken away their ability to exercise their second amendment rights. >> reporter: the republican represents newtown, but mckinney's district is also home to gun maker stern ruger and company. >> we need congress to act
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because if we pass a law in connecticut but the federal government doesn't have the same law, that makes connecticut less safe. >> reporter: connecticut already has some of the strictest gun laws in the country. >> i think what's going to happen here is we're going to divide the responsible gun owners-- who have no problem with some common sense changes-- and the people who think there should be no rules at all. >> reporter: mckinney also attended funerals for several of the sandy hook children. he agrees something has to be done, but he says lawmakers can't just focus on guns; they must focus on treatment of mental illness and school safety. >> it's time to put away those political fights and try to reach a consensus on what we can do that will actually make our society safer. >> reporter: state senator mckinney told us he does expect new gun control laws in connecticut this year. and, scott, the parents of sandy hook victims, they have some ideas of their own that will be announced on monday.
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>> pelley: michelle, thank you. we learned today that president obama will nominate his chief of staff, jack lew, to be the new secretary of the treasury. he will be a key player in the coming battles over the budget and raising the federal debt limit. lew previously served as budget director, and he was an executive with the banking giant citigroup. now, any idea what this is? you could be seeing a lot of it. it is jack lew's signature which would appear on the bills in your pocket just like that unless he takes a penmanship lesson from tim geithner, whose signature looked like this until he became treasury secretary and made it legible. secretary of state hillary clinton told reporters today that she is thrilled to be back at work, but she said it is bittersweet because she will soon be stepping down. the secretary said she wouldn't
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call it retirement, just stepping off the very fast track for a little while. we'll tell you why some of baseball's biggest stars didn't make the hall of fame today. an interview on the lance armstrong investigation is making news. did the cyclist try to buy his way out of a doping investigation? and what could be the worst wildfire in the world right now. when the "cbs evening news" continues. of using toothpaste to clean their denture. but dentures are very different to real teeth. they're about 10 times softer and may have surface pores where bacteria can grow and multiply. polident is specifically designed to clean dentures daily. its unique micro-clean formula kills 99.9% of odor causing bacteria and helps dissolve stains cleaning in a better way than brushing with toothpaste. that's why dentists recommend polident. [ male announcer ] polident. cleaner, fresher, brighter every day.
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>> pelley: there's a new accusation tonight against lance armstrong. the head of the united states anti-doping agency, travis tygart, says armstrong used money and threats to try to head off an investigation into performance-enhancing drugs. armstrong was stripped of his cycling titles after the anti- doping agency published its findings late last year. it found that armstrong had used banned drugs throughout his career. tygart spoke in an interview for tonight's premier of "60 minutes sports" on showtime. we asked about a donation that armstrong offered to tygart's anti-doping agency. what kind of donation was he interested in making to usada? >> it was a significant financial donation. >> pelley: which came to one what? >> one of his representatives' offices to us. it was in excess of $150,000.
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>> pelley: more like a quarter of a million dollars? >> it was around that ballpark. >> pelley: when you heard that what did you think? >> i was stunned. >> pelley: did you feel like you were being bought off? >> it was a clear conflict of interest for usada, and we had no hesitation in rejecting that offer. >> pelley: travis tygart says there were also threats against teammates to keep them quiet. tyler hamilton told a federal grand jury that he doped with armstrong, and he said the same on "60 minutes" in 2011. after that, hamilton told us recently he was confronted in a bar. >> turned to my right, and it was lance armstrong. >> pelley: so he stopped you cold. >> stops me cold. >> pelley: and says what? >> well, first, he asked how much "60 minutes" had paid me to do that interview. >> pelley: answer, nothing. >> obviously nothing, yeah. the biggest thing he said is you know, "we're going to make your life a living 'effing' hell, both in the courtroom and out." >> pelley: he was, at that moment, a target of a federal
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investigation and you were a witness in that federal investigation. >> yep. >> pelley: intimidating a witness is a federal crime. >> yeah. >> pelley: did you feel intimidated? >> i did. i did. i did. >> pelley: the rest of the story can be seen on the premier of "60 minutes sports" tonight at 10:00 on the showtime network. in new york city today, a ferry boat crashed into a dock in lower manhattan and about 70 people were hurt, 11 with serious injuries. the ferry was carrying hundreds of commuters from new jersey. the cause is under investigation. a record-breaking heat wave is fueling wildfires in australia. about 200 fires have burned hundreds of thousands of acres. no one has died, but more than 100 homes were destroyed. firefighters got a bit of relief today when temperatures cooled down from yesterday's high of 104 degrees. the c.d.c. has put out a warning about women and binge drinking. that's next.
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roommates were binge drinking four times a week. >> there were people in my bedroom throwing up all night, keeping the lights on, going in and out, yelling, screaming. >> reporter: you're trying to sleep and two people are in the same room vomiting from alcohol? >> yeah, uh-huh, exactly. >> reporter: the report says most female binge drinkers are 18 to 34 years old. on average, they have six drinks in one sitting about three times a month. >> i don't look at it as i'm putting-- drinking more and more alcohol and getting myself more drunk; it's just, like, i want to take more shots with my friends. it's a social interaction. >> reporter: binge drinking has largely been considered a problem for me. >> i'd say it's more the norm than a rarity. >> reporter: but a new documentary about women and binge drinking exposed why some women binge: peer pressure stress relief and escapism. lena lecaro has covered night life in los angeles for 20 years. >> i've seen girls being carried out of bathrooms, passed out. you know, that's concerning, but usually it's a younger clubgoer
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that's doing that. >> reporter: she says sweeter drinks and club culture are fueling the female binge. how do the women compare to the guys in terms of the excess drinking? >> i think girls can keep up with guys in that regard whether it be beer, shots, cocktails. the bottle service trend, which, basically, you buy an entire bottle and, you know, to get your money's worth, you're going to finish the bottle. >> reporter: but finishing that that bottle may not be worth the cost. ben tracy, cbs news, los angeles. >> pelley: three of baseball's biggest names, their reputations tainted by steroids, were shut out of the hall of fame today. to get in, a former player must get the votes of 75% of the baseball writers. well, roger clemens got less than 38%; barry bonds, about 36%; and sammy sosa, 12.5%. the writers did not elect anyone this year, the first time that's happened in 17 years.
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the legendary players that you're about to hear did make it to the hall of fame, and now they are headed to the library of congress. we'll give you a listen, next. next.
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greatest sports legends. they are part of a collection of 10,000 interviews just obtained by the library of congress. bob orr gives us a listen. >> reporter: for home run king hank aaron, the topic was integration. as one of major league baseball's black superstars, aaron carried the hopes of other aspiring players. >> because there were only a few of us and we knew that if we failed that it was going to fall upon the players that was coming behind us. >> reporter: legendary basketball coach john wooden felt pressure, too. the wizard of westwood won ten championships with ucla, yet he sought a more far reaching goal for his teams. >> their main purpose must always be to get an education. no matter how good they are, the small percentage are going to make it in the pros and a small percentage of those who make it are going to be the stars.
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>> reporter: those are two of the 10,000 interviews spanning 25 years just acquired by the library of congress. the tapes from the national radio program "sports byline usa" are being converted to digital files to be shared with the public. >> i believe the earliest one from 1988 -- >> reporter: the collection's curator says the interviews take fans inside the thoughts of their heroes, like mickey mantle. when the yankees sent the struggling rookie to the minors, mantle threatened to quit. his father, an oklahoma zinc miner, confronted the young slugger. >> he said, "hell, i'm taking you home so you can go back and work in the mines with me." he said, "i thought i raised a man. you're nothing but a coward." >> when you read somebody's words, that's fine. but when you hear them speak and you hear, say, mickey's oklahoma twang and his youthful exuberance when he's talking about the game, i think it has more impact. >> reporter: many of those heard on the tapes are now gone. smokin' joe frazier reflects on his heavyweight championship. >> boxing is the sport that put guys from the gutter -- to put
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them with kings. and some people can't accept that. >> reporter: and nascar's intimidator, dale earnhardt, who died on the track at daytona, talks about pushing racing's limits. >> we're racing pretty hard, and it's competitive out there. but always know that i'm out there racing and having a good time and doing what i enjoy doing. >> reporter: they are voices of legends now preserved for all time, a sound track of america's sports history. bob orr, cbs news, culpepper, virginia. >> and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. captions by: caption colorado comments@captioncolorado.com >>your realtime captioner: linda marie macdonald. good evening, i'm allen martin. >> i'm elizabeth cook. we begin tonight with
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breaking news. on the effort to find a girl from hayward missing since 1988. we learn late this afternoon a bone fragment found in a well where several victims of the so- called "speed freak" killers are buried is not that of michaela garecht taken from outside a hayward shopping center in november 1988. the bone fragment was found last october. because of the estimated age, it was thought it could bring closure in the garecht case. her mother has been notified of the findings. the bone is linked to a previously identified murder victim. a bizarre twist tonight in what looked like an open-and- shut case with a home invasion robbery in the east bay. we already knew the man breaking into an apartment in pittsburg was stabbed to death in a struggle with the man living there. phil matier says it's a plot by a cheating wife to scare her husband. >> reporter: that's right.
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the idea was to scare the man who lived in this apartment complex but the plan went wrong and four people are facing murder. >> in the past hours our detectives have conducted numerous interviews and have been able to give us clarity on the events. >> reporter: it turns out that the man who was being burglarized had recently learned that his wife was having an he had agreed to move out but an -- >> reporter: the husband was growing marijuana legally in the apartment and that may have been used in an inducement to get the burglars to break into the place. what they didn't figure on was that the husband would fight

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